Russia tells its officials: don't tip off athletes about dope tests
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[July 02, 2018]
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's sports
ministry has sent an internal memo instructing staff of national
training centers not to tip off athletes about doping tests, in what
three leading international anti-doping specialists said was a rare
Russian acknowledgement of methods used in the past to hide
drug-taking.
As part of an investigation into alleged state-sponsored doping in
Russian athletics, a commission set up by the World Anti-Doping
Agency (WADA) found in 2015 that athletes were given advance notice
of out-of-competition testing, which helped drug cheats evade
detection.
Russia dismissed the WADA report as baseless, and it still rejects
allegations it has covered up its athletes' positive tests,
including at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, though it has
acknowledged shortcomings in its anti-doping set-up.
The internal memo, seen by Reuters, was dated April 4, signed by
Deputy Sports Minister Natalia Parshikova and was addressed to staff
of national training centers where elite sportspeople train.
"The employees of training bases must not notify athletes' staff or
the athletes themselves of the arrival of doping control officers at
the training bases," the letter reads.
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Richard McLaren, a Canadian lawyer who worked on the 2015 WADA
report and other probes into alleged state-sponsored doping in
Russia, said he and his colleagues had not come across such
documents.
Asked about the memo, the sports ministry said it was "periodically
reminding employees of these sports facilities to comply with the
requirements of international anti-doping legislation" but would not
say when it began sending such letters. The letter does not say it
constitutes a reminder.
WADA founder Dick Pound, who chaired the commission that produced
the 2015 report, told Reuters the fact the ministry had sent the
letter "must necessarily reflect some knowledge on the part of the
government that the offending conduct has continued, or it would not
have been necessary to 'remind' anyone."
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A letter of Russian Sports Ministry asking employees of national
training centres not to give athletes advance notice of doping tests
is seen at the Novogorsk Federal Sports Centre outside Moscow,
Russia June 21, 2018. Picture taken June 21, 2018. REUTERS/Gabrielle
Tetrault-Farber
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While the ministry's letter calls for better anti-doping practices,
it "serves to reinforce the existence of a previous deliberate
regime to undermine anti-doping and confound the sample collection
process," said Doug MacQuarrie, the chair of the Institute of
National Anti-Doping Organisations (iNADO).
"It supports the theory that the rules were not respected when
anti-doping control officers would arrive," said Christiane Ayotte,
head of Canada's WADA-accredited laboratory.
The doping allegations have dealt a major blow to Russia's standing
in international sports and continue to shape its relations with
global sports bodies.
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Giles Elgood)
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